:37:01
You never know what the future holds,
do you, my dear?
:37:04
Exactly. That was Sister George talking,
wasn't it?
:37:09
One can't help slipping occasionally.
:37:11
But you are Sister George,
and far more so than June Buckridge...
:37:15
to all of us at Television Center.
:37:17
Jolly nice of you to say so.
:37:19
I say, would you rather have had a drink?
:37:22
No. No, thank you.
:37:25
You know, you've made the part
completely your own.
:37:28
But that was obvious
even at the first auditions.
:37:30
And that motor bike.
It really completes the image.
:37:33
A stroke of sheer brilliance.
:37:35
People are always telling me
how wonderfully cheerful you look...
:37:39
buzzing around on your bike.
:37:41
You'd look cheerful too...
:37:44
with 50 cubic centimeters
throbbing away between your legs.
:37:52
No doubt.
:37:57
Now, Miss Buckridge...
:37:59
or may I call you Sister George
like everyone else does?
:38:02
Please do.
:38:04
In point of fact, there's rather
a serious matter I wish to discuss with you.
:38:08
I see.
:38:13
Here we are.
:38:17
Sorry I took so long.
:38:19
Lovely.
:38:21
We'll continue our little chat after tea.
:38:23
- lf you'd rather...
- No, sit down.
:38:26
You can speak quite freely, you know.
:38:28
Miss McNaught and I have no secrets
from each other.
:38:32
That's nice.
:38:34
None at all. None whatsoever.
:38:39
Let's all have tea first, shall we?
:38:41
- Milk?
- Thank you.
:38:44
- Sugar?
- No, thank you.
:38:49
I say, what delicious-looking scones.
:38:52
They're scotch scones.
:38:53
About this little talk
you wanted to have with me...
:38:55
A specialty of mine.
Copied from a recipe of my grandmother's.
:38:59
You're quite a little housewife, aren't you?